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Miss Confection® Tulip Blend

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Miss Confection® Tulip Blend

A sweet combination of a strong reddish pink and a creamy yellow that turns pure white. They bloom earlier than most other large tulips, offering a delicious preview of the parade of color to come. Introduced 2006

Item # 1270
Height 16—18 inches
Sunlight Full (6+ hours sun per day)
Soil Well drained
Flower Color Reddish Pink and White
Blend % 50/50
Bulb Size 12cm+
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Bulb size is determined by the circumference around the largest part of the bulb. Colorblends only delivers top size bulbs. Large bulbs produce more or larger flowers than small bulbs.
USDA Zones 3a—8b
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Hardy in USDA zones 3a to 8b in the South or 10b on the West Coast. Prechill in zones 7b and warmer in the South, Southwest, and California.
Bloom Time Early-Mid
Bloom times are relative within the spring bulb season, which varies from place to place and year to year. They are intended to help you plan a sequence of bloom from Very Early season to Very Late season. About two weeks separate Early from Mid and Mid from Late. The start and duration of bloom is heavily dependent on the weather. Warm temperatures speed up growth and flowering; cold temperatures slow them down.
i
  • early
  • mid
  • late

$ 0.00

Quantity Price per bulb
100 to 900 $ 0.38
1,000 to 5,900 $ 0.31
6,000 to 11,900 $ 0.29
12,000 or more $ 0.28

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Planting Instructions

Tulips perform best in full sun but will tolerate a bit of shade (some afternoon shade will prolong flower life, especially in the South). They require well-drained soil. Treat tulips as annuals if you want a perfect display: After they flower, lift and discard the bulbs and replant fresh ones in the fall. In a less formal situation, you can leave the bulbs in place. The flowers will be uneven in size and height and generally much fewer in number, but that can have its own charm.

To encourage tulips to bloom again in future years we recommend that you:

  1. Remove the spent flowers as soon as the bulbs finish blooming. Snapping off the top 3 inches of the flower stem prevents seed formation and focuses energy instead on bulb growth.
  2. Allow the foliage to wither completely before you remove it.
  3. Avoid summer irrigation. Tulips prefer to be dry during their dormancy.
Depth of Planting Hole 5 inches
Spacing 4 inches apart

Education Center

Recommendations for the South

Many spring-flowering bulbs struggle in warm southern climates. Some do fine despite the lack of prolonged winter cold. Others do reasonably well if prechilled before planting.
Read More

When to Plant

The short answer is “fall,” but we can be a little more precise.
Read More